jJk-L g SUNDAY OREGOyiK, PORTEAKP, 'APRIL' 30, 1905. The Rich Man's Opportunity A SWELL LINE OF Iron Beds AT LOW PRICES We say we have the finest line of Iron Beds In the city. We say our prices are far lower than those of any other store. "We want you to see the Beds, so we can hear what you say. FURNITUREr Common People's Want of Enthusiasm forSome Multimillionaires By Doctor Newill 3D wight Hillis, Pastor of Plymouth Church, Brooklyn. d 4S HIGH G RADE (When al other Jonns of enthusiasm wane, the enthusiasm for the hero Trill -war and grow more and more. Property is the shield ahove the soul that protects it from the cruelty of rain and snow and storm. iWherever the man of unique financial genius has used his ten talents to serve the thousands of his workmen who have only one talent; wherever he has been, a shepherd to them, has given them their just wage, told them no lies, given them brotherhood instead of exploiting them, and applied the law of truth an& justice, that rich man today is loved and revered, because of his service. The common people know their friends. "When the rich man 'gives tp buy a little reputation, when he goes into politics to promote his own interest, when he puts his name to head a subscription list in order io call away the attention of the people from some act of industrial injustice, the people see through the.device. They know jvhen a man rings true. The time has come for every patriot who loves his country and believes ia the republic, in the sanctity of property, to speak out and condemn anarchy and lawlessness toward man and God,, whether that lawlessness be found among the ignorant or wise the poor or rich. Text: "Ho (Christ), being; rich, for our cakes -made himself poor." "Woe unto those who lade themselves down -with -thick clay." MAN'S earliest and .latest enthusiasm is his enthusiasm for heroes, and hero worship. The rude clansman asks for a noblo chief. Young artist pu pils long for a great master. Joyfully the soldiers die for the great General. Once the true hero stands forth, the common people rise up with an abandon of gratitude for 'Kossuth, the patriot, for Garibaldi, the deliverer of Italy; for -Lincoln, the emancipator and martyr. Nor the people forget their benefactors. The years may come and the years may go, but each year -wears more deeply the pathway to the hero's tomb, -while par ents tafce their little ones to his grave, that they may kindle their torch from the sacred flame that burns forever, on this altar of love and remembrance. Sometimes this enthusiasm for the rich man takes on pathetic forms. Tolstoi is a man of much gold, vast estates, whose ancestral home was a castle. Tol stoi has been gold to the common people, 4ndecd, but what is much more important, he has been wisdom to the people, virtue to the people, to them an example, a guide, a shepherd, a, savior. He knew that the life was more than meat, and . that the least of his gifts was the gift -of bread, that the real gift was himself, '.expressed in terns of love and ecrvice. e other day, the old man Tolstoi went with an American guest to another city, In Russia. When the people in the streets recognized him, they rushed together, one vast tumultuous multitude. "Workmen kissed Tolstoi's hands, mothers lifted their little children to touch the hem of "Sis garment, peasants waved hats, shop copers forgot their goods, and the peo pletfted the old man in their arms, to carry""&lm into the town. "What did it r mean? irneans that for, generations 'to come, fathers :and mothers 'will rise up early and sit up late kindle virtue, the love of truth and the Jilevotloa to duty in. the minds of their fchjldren by re hearsing the story of Tols'faiwho was born to gold, lands, office and honors, a man who, being rich, made his .gold to shine for the peasants and the common people. "When all other forms o'f enthtSv siasm wane, the enthusiasm for the hero T.ill wax and grow more and more. "Why 2yo Enthusiasm for the Ilidi? Nothing is more cortain than the pop ularity of our merchants, our bankers, our manufacturers. In the average town and city. These have, through industry, honor and Justice, earned their position and the esteem, that is given to them. And we would naturally expect, there fore, that the men who have achieved many, many millions would be similarly honored by the Nation. But, with sorrow and shame, we must confess that the t common people of the republic exhibit no enthusiasm ior the excessively rich, save in one or two instances. Some ex plain the fact by emphasizing envy, that Is the vice of mean souls. It is said that incompetence and failure are always jealous of success. Criticism is the pen alty that greatness and gold must pay. Doubtless pro-eminence- Is open to the attacks of the envious. The man who climbs to the top of the ladder becomes a target for those who tried to climb and could not reach the top. It has been isaid that even the President "pays dear ly for his "White House." It would seem to follow that popularity and enthusiasm are lost when a man. achieves many, many millions. But this statement Is as superficial as it Is unjust History is a wise teacher, and if history teaches any thing It tells us that in all generations if one rich man has been hated by reason of his cruelty, and so lost leadership, that the great man of that generation has nearly always been a rich man who has been the savior and the Idol of his people, because of his justice and his truth and pity for the sheep that looked to him as shepherd. If any man thinks that the common people aro always en vious of the rich man In bis palace, lot him recall Lord Shaftesbury, whose mon ument has been erected by the poor in London. Shaftesbury lived In a magnifi cent country house, owned wide estates, had a palace in the most exclusive street in London, yet when he died 200,00ft peo ple, of the common people and the- poor, lined the 'streets. "Whole trades attended in a body. An organization of working women carried a banner, "I was anhun gered, and yo ied me." A thousand boys stood in one block, representing news-'--"boys, bootblacks, costermongers. They lifted on a flag these words, "I was sick and in prison and ye ministered unto me." Nothing would be easier than to match the enthusiasm of the people for Shaftes bury with a thousand similar names dur ing the past 500 years. The common peo ple are not envious of all rich men. The Croesus who wants the enthusiasm of the common people can be Idolized and (almost worshiped by them. Nothing is risked in the statement that many multi millionaires in this country are throwing away the greatest opportunity vouch safed to any men of their era. "WJiaX Wealth Can Bo. The importance of this subject becomes the more apparenthenwe consider tbejs ten talents, to serve tho thousands number of rich men we have today, and the greater number we will have tomor row. The Republic is now worth approxi mately one hundred billions. By reason of the new tools, the new savings of former wastes, the increase of produc tion, the doubling of the treasures of loom and shop and mine and forest and field and herd and flock, it Is plain that poor men are to become rich, and rich men richer. Just now all the people have the necessities and a few have the lux uries. It is equally certain that if the great industrial leaders will play fair and work hard, and the laboring classes do justice and work equally hard, that soon, very soon, ail the people can enjoy some of tho luxuries, and have leisure in part But it must come through prop erty. "Wealth we must have to support school and college and gallery and home Property is the shield above the soul that protects it from the cruelty of rain and enow and storm. But it seems then that where we now have a few rich men we are to have many, and our present little wealth is to become great wealth. But tho wealth must be organized. Shafts bury's wealth was a blessing because he intellectuallzed it Other men's wealth ia a curse to the community, because it has been made selfish. It is said that tho rain from heaven and the wide river Howing through the land change the des ert Into a garden, and fill the land with wealth and beuuty. Now this is abso lutely untrue. Whether a river shall be a blessing or a curse, depends upon what it does. For one-half of it course tho River Rhine turns nalllwheele, runs fac tories, quickens the flight of spindles relieves the laborer of his drudgery. Just so long as it is giving and distributing and serving, it cleanses tho air, enriches the fields, carries, the ships of trade and tho crafts of plchsjije. Finally, however, the Rhino refuels service. It spreads out over the fields,, and refuses to flow. It turns the land into a vast swamp, be cause It Is stagnant Through selfishness it becomes a kind of Dead Sea. It lives for itself aloie. From its flow rise clouds of miasm,, until its breath is pestilence, and Its Wings are death. So also is it with property. Whenever a man has pro duced wealth and used it pouring his soul througn it and making It serve. gaining that wealth by truth, Juetice, in dustry economy.-prudence and t! rift, and then handing it on, saying to this poor boy, 'Gq to college and speak for tho people"; tb this poor artist, "Study and paint for thc-iople"; to this great au thor, "Instruct and wrftc for the peo ple"; to this architect, "Build for tho people"; to this physician, "Heal the peo ple and succor the people." "Then wealth has blessed the stat i. That man shall bo like "a tree planted by "the rivers of water; he shall bring forth his fruit in his season, and whatsoever he doeth shall prosper." Just now, however, this kind of man is as occasional as a solitary palm tree waving in a desert But the time is at hand when rich men shall be like tho tree of life, growing on the banks of the river of the water of life, named abundance for all the people. Why Unique Commercial Genius? Why is it that God gives some men unique financial genius? The true answer Is based upon tho old division of society into the six classes of men. God raises up the soldier to keep the state in lib erty, the physician to keep the slate in health, the teacher to keep the state in knowledge, the pastor to keep the state in morals, tho jurist to keep the 3tate in justice, while the manufacturer or mer chant has been raised up to feed the state and clothe the state. The soldier, named Garibaldi or Phocion or Cromwell, dies to keep tho Btate in liberty. The poet named Homer or Dante or Emerson, begs bread and lives ia a simple cottage. His reward is in the consciousness that he has Inspired the people. Lincoln is raised up to emancipate the weak. He makes no charge for his unique wisdom, gives his golden sentences freely, pays tho prico for-tho common people's ador ation, and dies for the state without com mercial reward. In times of cholera or yellow lever, the physicians go South, and freely risk life to keep the people in health. Did the discoverer of ether take v)ut a patent on his anaesthetic"? Mer chantsurged him to do so; they said that he could die worth a million dollars. Their argument was that the merchant, in tho hour of physical agony, would glvo his storo or factory in exchange for this wisdom tha destroys pain for wife or child. Did he hold tho people up, taking advantage of the genius God had given him? What if Paul had refused to give his genius, manifest in tho Ode to Love and the argument of Immortality, In the book of Corinthians, and declined to yield the fruit of his genius unless the people paid bim. In a river of gold? Emerson tolled for the people, of this country on an income of $1200 a year. And why does God give to a manufacturer his genius or to a merchant his talent and strength? It is that he may feed the state and clothe the state, laboring as Homer sang, as Dante dreamed, as Milton wrote, as Emerson prayed, as nurse or physician do and die, with the self-abnegation of Lincoln, and the Belf-sacrifice of Kos suth and Tolstoi. And wherever the man of unique financial genius has used Beautiful Extension Tables at Bargain Prices Our new Tables are now in and we invite you to see the many odd and swell styles Quartered Oak Table, 48-inph top $lo.OO Polished Tables Quartered Oak Pedestal .25 SI.OO DOWN AND Sl.OO PER WEEK BUYS 29th ANNIVERSARY OPENING NEXT SATURDAY EVENING FROM 7 TO 10 You are cordially invited to attend our grand opening. See our beautiful stock of furnittfre-and set a beaulEui souvenir of tho Lewis and Clark Fair. : : , : : of his workmen "who have only one talent; wherever he has been . shepherd to them, has given themthclr' just wage, told them no lies, given th'rr brotherhood Instead of exploiting them, and applied tho law of truth and -Justice, that rich man today is loved and revered, because of hie serv ice. He also, least of all, knows what an. outburst' of sorrow will go up from lt3 peopl... when he has passed from this eai tli. How littlo does he suspect the rev cvence with which parents will mention his name to their children! The Exploiting of the People. But ovor against this man put the man of financial genius whose motto Is squeeze the workmen, pinch them, exploit them. Force the wage down, use hunger and want and .cold and necessity as scourge. Tell lies to the people to get gold. Bribe railway officials, extort secret privileges, and the devil take the hindormost And then, having gotten the multi-millions, to use Ruskin's expressive word, he says: "Here am I. Come, working people, build me a palace In the city, enthrone me on high. Build me pleasure barges and fashion thrones. Make a crown for my head, weave rugs for my feet with silken threads; sing before me, that I may sleep. Dance beforeme that I may laugh. Speak before me that I may admire. Burn In cense that I may breathe Its sweetness. Mix wine for mo and fill up the cup of flattery that I may drink and forget." Is not this the cxaot and literal biography of men for whom the common people have no enthusiasm? Be not deceived. The common people know their friends, When the rich man gives to buy a little reputa tion, when he goes Into politics to pro mote his own Interest, when he puts his name to head a sub scription list to call away tho atten tion of the people from some act of in dustrial injustice, the people seo through the device. They know when a man rings true. You can fool some of the people all the time, you can fool all of the people some of the time; you cannot fool all of the people all of the time. The common people are not always right, but In terms of ten years' Judgment the common peo ple are almost never wrong. Tho peasants of Ruspla have decided; they have written the name of Tolstoi in letters of gold on that monument of remembrance set up In the heart; low down and bespattered with mud, In letters of blackness, they have written the name of the Czar and- the rich Princes, who might have been held In everlasting remembrance. Flesh Nexus Cash Xexus. Long ago Carlyle spoke of the cash nexusbetweenthe employer and his work men. He mourned over tho chasm that was being digged between the head of the factory and his worklngmen. He prophe sied that if the time ever came when the employer and manufacturer, with his ge nius, ceased to be a, shepherd and a father and friend to those who had less genius than himself, and bought worklngmen and sold them, as he bought tools and wool, his people would organize and turn against him. And that -when he had ex ploited them .and driven them down, using his genius to make the "wage less and less at the labor end, and the profits more and more at the capital end, they would produce less and less, and he. would, as a man of genius, gain less and less. Carlyle believed that the law of Industrial Justice was the law of wealth, for capital and labor alike. For a gen eration the employer called his workmen hands and despised them. Then the work men met contempt with hate. They or ganized and held back their hands and limited the output, working grudgingly,, and now England has lost' the market of the world. After three generations of the Greatest Bargains Ever Offered in Household Furniture No matter what you want we have it at a very low price. All the highest grade Furniture and Carpets in all the newest and latest styles Your Credit Is Quartered Oak Polished Extension Table $21 Swell Mission Table, 54-inch " top, quartered oak, wax finish $45 cash nxus, when -the Boer war carat; bn, the factory district of England was ffiaad to be filled with physical feeblings, with deficient eyes, fiahby les and arms and shrunken chests. Not ono boy In teq could pass the military examination. Meanwhile, capital and tho employers have suffered by exploiting the people. "In our country also there are men who are adopting the same method. I know a great manufacturer of lnstx'uments, who runs his factory for ten months In the year. He shuts the shop always at a time when the working people are neediest. By doing this ho breaks up the union of his worklngmen, gets them to the poind of hunger and under the scourge of want in Winter, and then forces them to accept, not a living, but a starving. He Is said to be worth' $15,000,000. He has just given a large sum to educate young men and women In his own town. God put him in Irelation with his worklngmen. His nexus was a nesn arm mooa nexus tnrougn their hands. Out of his hundreds and hundreds of worklngmen trie vast ma jority hate him. In the Winter they wakon to curse his name; at night they sleep, praying 'God for vengeance on him. Meanwhile, knowing that tho nexus be tween himself and those whom God gave to him as sheep, to be guided by his shepherding. Is a nexus of hate, he Is How Best to Secure Clean Markets 3Icssago From, the Scv Inspector Asking: Co-Operntion of Every Portland Buyer. At the request of Tho Orrgonlan, liilan I Ulan 12. Tingle, director of the Portland School of Domestic Science, lias written the following article, which appeal, or should appeal, to every housewife In Portland. MLis Tingle was recently appointed Market Inspector and has It la her power to coerce negligent marketmea into' needed reform, but she does not pro pose at tho start to jro about with a club. She wants the aid of every one who boys perishable food at the mar Vets. Her theory Js tluvt threatened loss of business will arouse In careless merchants the Instinct of self-p reser vation and thus establish not for a week or a month, but permanently, a system of .cleanliness so necessary to public health. IF the housekeepers of Portland really desire clean markets and the proper treatment of the food ma terials they provide for their house holds, It -will be necessary for each and every one to lend a hand in "tho long pull and strong pull" wo aro making. Spasmodic offort is worse than useless. An inspector alone may talk until doomsday, may make regulations and invoke the strong arm of the law again and again, but nothing perma nent and satisfactory can be accom plished until the Individual housewife realizes her responsibility and under takes to show her marketman in a practical way that she really cares whether sanitary or unsanitary con ditions exist. No doubt thero are some women who do not care, who say when one talks of danger from dirt Oh, don't add an other horror to life. If what you say were true, we should all be dead long ago." "Well, some of us are dead, and some of us are sick, and many of us are dragging along with diminished vitality from these very causes. Un fortunately, it, is not always oasy in Good Make Polished Quartered Oak Tables $25 7 Quartered Oak Round Table, polished top $18 ANY TABLE IN THE HOUSE GEVURTZ 173-175 First trying to establish a .icXus with students, because thnt appeals y& his Trrlde, and gains public approbation. An aqc of jus tice or kindness to his own worklngmen would bring no praise; for generosity, be cause the public know that that would be simple truth and deserves no praise. This man Is a real anarchist. He Is de stroying the confidence of the poor In the Institutions of the Republic He is will ing to ruin the people, but he Is very angry if anybody describes their destruc tion. The real crime, however, ts his doing the thing, and not my mentioning it. The time has come for every patriot, who loves his country, and believes In the Re public, In tho sanctity of property, to speak out and condemn anarchy and law lessness toward man and God, whether that lawlessness be found among the ignorant or wise, the poor or rich. The only path that leads to peace is the path of justice and obedience to the laws of the Republic and the laws of God. On tho other hand, the path that leads to honor and love and Immortal remembrance Is the path of service, justice and brother hood. The common people know their enemies and never forget their friends. Immortal forever that man who, being rich, for the people's sake makes himself poor. (Copyright, 1905, by McClure, Phil lips & Co.) these matters to trace back from ef fect to cause and show such peoplo the definite results of carelessness. Na ture has a curious system of book, keeplng: she sends In her bills with unfailing regularity and they? must all be paid some day, but she seldom dates them, and never gives an Item ized account. We are beginning, how ever, to understand some of her meth ods, and it behooves us to live, up to our knowledge and to try to gain more. But the housewife who cares, what can sho do? First, she must inform herself as to what precautions ought to be taken in the handling of food and how much can be reasonably ex pected; and then she can use that strongest of arguments the pocket argument with her dealer. She should give her custom only to those who show themselves willing to com ply with the demands of modern clean liness. This point cannot be too strongly emphasized. She should re quire at least as much care and neat ness In the handling of material that is to be put into and, in part, will be her body, as she does in the handling of material which Is to adorn her body. It will no doubt be sometimes troublesome and disagreeable to no tice and to speak about these things, but it is tho only way in which she can discharge her duty to her family and to herself. let her take the trou ble for the honor of her calling the greatest In the world. Now for a few practical details as to what she should require. Cleanliness is, after all, a vague word, and very vari ously interpreted. Careful housekeeper, what follows is addressed to you personally: You must demand: Personal cleanliness on the part of the salespeople; clean aprons and overalls that can be frequently washed, instead of the woolen clothes, stiff with ancient grease and dirt, that we so often find in our investigations. Provision for fre quent washing, and-the use of such provi Your Own Terms A GREAT SALE OP MATTINGS Elnen "Warp Matting-, the 35c and 40c kind; all this week CARPET VALUES That Are Unsurpassed Again we call your attention to our immense Carpet Stock. We carry more grades and different designs than any other store in the city. We offer you Oarpets from 5c to 25c a yard less than other! stores. All we ask is that you! look them over and get our prices. ALASKA REFRIGERATORS. 1 The best kind made, the only re-j f rigerator charcoal Ailed. Fine hard vrood case, -white tile lined. Overj 680,000 In Tine. i SO styles from 5.50 to $00.00, Street 219 to sion, so that food material may not be contaminated or deteriorated by hands that have recently touched anything ob jectionable. 'An Immense amount of edu cation is necessary along these lines. Second Protection of food materials by glass, wherei'er possible Do not buy any of the following foods If they have not been kept under - glass or otherwise se curely protected from dust: Dried and salt Ash, cheese, cooked meats, honey, pickles, olives, sauerkraut, mincemeat, bread, cakes, biscuits, lard, butter, candy, dried fruit. In up-to-date markets, these and some other foods aro always pro tected In tills way. Is there any reason why Portland should be behind tho times? Third Protection of vegetables and meats from street flies, dogs and rats. This means that such goods should not be exposed on the sidewalks, and that even inside the stores, boxes of vegetable should be at least two feet above tho floor, and that screens and mosquito bars be freely used. Jt Is hardly necessary nowadays to emphasize tho danger from flies and rats as carriers of disease germs. Fourth General cleanliness In tho store Clean walls, well-scrubbed floors and I shelves. Ceilings free from cobwebs. Pro tection of food during sweeping and dust ing. Good ventilation. Fifth Food kept free from decaying matter. In looking over fish, poultry and vegetables, one too often see3 fresh and stale plied together. Even though you have the knowledgo which enables you to select the best, you must realize how the best may be deteriorated by contact with partially decayed matter. Bo critical and careful In your selection, and do not hesi tate to blame whero necessary. Sixth Care of goods In delivery. Bo sure that things come to you properly wrapped and In clean delivery wagons, and that there is no direct handling by tho drivers. Insist upon a high standard of care and cleanliness, and you will find the market men anxious to meet your wishes. If they aro not now, they soon will be, if you show them you aro In earnest, and that It will make a difference to their business whether they are on a clean list or not. With them, naturally, it is chiefly a business proposition; with you it is a matter of duty to yourself and to your neighbor. See to it, also, that your own kitchen and basement are above re proach, and that the care and handling of the food there Is what it ought to be. We must all co-operate housewives, market men and Board of Health for better conditions, and for the good name and good health of Portland. v ULIAN E. TINGLE. Historical Gavel Part of the AVood Im From First Apple Tree Grown in Ore roh Territory. THE Oregon Historical Society is preparing an Interesting souvenir which it will shortly present to the Iowa Historical Society. It Ls a gavel consisting of four pieces of wood, each piece taken from a historic tree grown in this state. Moreover, three of the pieces have a connection in some way with the State of Iowa. The handle of the jgavel is made of the wood of a service berry shrub which grew upon the donation claim of Morton M. McCarver about two miles above Oregon City. Mr. Carver came from Iowa to this state in 12543, the first year of em igration. He was, a pioneer of restless and intrepid character, and Is credited with being the founder of Burlington, la.; Linton, Or., and Tacoma. Wash. McCarver's donation claim above Ore gon City has been, since 1S63. tho prop erty of Mr.. Warner. The service berry. 25c g Yard J-y Solid Brass Bed, extra heavy posts, fine shaped spirals and ornaments; worth $35 COfs AA Special 4xU.VrU Heavy Iron Bed, like cut, all colors, handsomely finished in aa gold; reg. $14 Special. 3C7lU Swell Iron Bed, 6 feet 3 inches hJgb, finished in pretty color combina tions, heavy brass trim- r- o CA ming; great special at.. JjiJvJU 227 Yamhill Street bush, now become historic, grew to un usual size. Its berries, when dried were used in makingpemmican. combined with kause, camas and sunflower roots and vpnfeon. The service berry wood, though of lig' t weight, has a fine grain and taka an excellent polish. It is the color of vlr.; maple. The head of the gavel Is composed ol tnree pieces ox wood, apple, cherry art uregon' grape. Tho apple wood grew the orchard of Dr. John McLoughlin. at Vancouver. Tho tree was planted bv James Bruce, the old Scotch gardner, and, was among the first lot of seedllnar an-5 V hitman is authority for the statement' tnat these seeds were brought from Lon don in 1825. A number of young men who were coming out to the Western "World a3 employes of the Hudson's Bay Com pany were given a farewell dinner before sailing. The seeds of apples eaten at the dinner were thrust into the pockets, of tne young men by some of the girls wh 3 were present Later, after their arrival at Fort Vancouver, the seeds were dis covered and given, to Bruce. Elolse Mc Loughlin must have played under the apple trco when It was pink and white with blossoms. Mrs. Whitman and Mrs. Spaulding ate of its fruit, and In her diary entry for September 12. 1S38. the former makes mention of this. Jason Lee must have walked under the shado of the tree, and old Dr. John hunself and the madame had many associations with it. Indeed, if one gives way to imagina tion and pictures the sights which the ap ple tree must have shared, the whole history of tho old fort at Vancouver H its early days comes peering forth- from the shadows of the days of long ago. When this tree was cut down George H. Hlmes secured a piece of It for the His torical Society. The cherry wood in the gavel is from a Royal Ann tree, tho scion of which was brought across tho plains from Iowa in 1S47. So it is going back to the land of Its nativity. One Henderson Luelllng. a North Carolinian "by birth, who had set tled In Iowa, became much interested in the Oregon country through reading tha journals of Lewis and Clark. In 1S15 ha began preparations to remove to tha Coast Having learned the nurseryman's craft, he conceived the idea of bringing out a number of fruit trees of different kinds. Ho grafted the best kinds of fruit on to seedling stocks and in 1S47 had from S00 to 1000 scions. Theso h planted In two long boxes in earth about a foot deep. They were shielded from hungry cattle by frames built up around the sides. Then Luelling set off across the plains with his traveling nursery, drawn by stout horses. Most of tho sci ons lived, and when he arrived at a spot in the present town of Milwaukie he halt ed and transplanted them into the soil of Oregon. Thus caine the first nursery here. One of ,the most notable trees from these scions is one now growing on the David Chambers estate near Olympla. Chambers came all the way from Puget Sound to buy a fruit tree of Lewclling. He secured a large cherry tree, which he carried down the Columbia In a boat. At the mouth of the Cowlitz he loaded the tree on horseback and rode homewards over the trail. He was rewarded tha second year by a small crop of cherries. Every year since, without fall the tree has given of its delicious fruit, and even now-, in venerable age, grown to the great girth of nine feet and six Incites. It bears each year its snowy blossoms and ripens its harvest of luscious cherries. The cherry wood in the gavel being made is, however, from a tree that grew to old age on Lewellyn's place, where It was first set out The gavel will bo finished in about two weeks and will then be forwarded to Iowa City, Ia., where the State Histori cal Society has its headquarters. 3fodern Wives. Truth. "Algy, dear," a well-known- woman asked across tho table at a recent din ner, "have we any children? I forget Anotherjsilonced her husbandf at luncheon ,by saying: "Husbands"are made to ba seen, not to bo heard." &S0INS r